«audience; No. zi. CHARLESTON FOLLIES TIMELY AMUSEMENT Maids’ Club Presents Aitaal Skits With Jazz Interludes of Music and Dancing 1928 ORCHESTRA PERFORMS VOL. XIl. The Charleston Follies were performed by the Maids’ Club, Saturday night, in the gymnasium before .a large and. enthusiastic «The * ros orchestra furnished musical accompaniments’ when these were not supplied by mouth organs and ukeleles. “The first episode,” ‘a movie of The Sheik, by Pembroke Hall, had to be run off back- -wards‘due to a “mishap to the camera.” The whole drama, done on* horseback, was -very vivid and well executed. Radnor gave a lecture on tle perfect movie. Thc sithouetting of the figures was very effective as the emotions of the audience followed Romeo eagerly through his trials. A horrid-looking rival seemed for a moment to be snatching the prize from his “grasp, aided by Juliet’s father, but in manly fash- ion, after ineffectually trying all forms of duelling from fencing to boxing arid a Wil- helm Tell match, he dragged him off the stage and presumably threw him in the horse pond. : A graphic figure of Time passed, and then «the audience was allowed to see the “get- away”. of the young people. ‘Descending a stép-ladder into the arms of, her lover,. Juliet persuaded him to hide behind an umbrella while she packed her bag. So much time ie Bart ied? ON PAGE 3 THE AVERAGE STUDENT: WHAT THE COLLEGE CAN DO FOR HER Three Lines Open For Training Large Middle Group of Students The average student, as representative of the large group in College, was dis- cussed by Miss Park in chapel on Mon- day morning, April 12. To be numerical, the average student lies somewhere between the Upper Ten and the lower ten; not a single student, but the whole group who fall between these extremes. The faculty derive most pleasure from the upper ten, and the lower ten occasions them most worry, but the average group, that homogeneous inass with a common problem, demand a share of the administrative time and at- tention. “They belong there for many reasons, Potentially some belong to the upper group; lack of interest, immaturity or faulty preparation alone keeps them out, But there are others whose difficulty is intellectual, one of memory or clear thinking. And this is more apparent here because College tests that side cane to the exclusion of others. Responsibility’: for this group is as- sumed by the College, which Miss Park believes can do three very: definite things for them. It can teach them to dis- . — between inaccuracy and ac- to paraphrase that overworked CONTINUED ON PAGE 5 ‘The Editorial Boa of the Col- lege News takes great pleasure i in an- noaacing See sae ee result of its: ot ‘ ‘ he & +4 | New S “BRYN ‘MAWR “AND | WAYNE), PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14,1926 ~*~. PRICE, 10. CENTS ° AT “aaa. See q . « this year. Carol Platt, '27, was also elected Hopkinson, 26. ~ ~~ We Call to ——_t_ A special edition of a certain Washington paper was brought to proclaim the first bloom of the Japancse cherry. trees. of ‘every Editor of the News lies an unformed query: CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION ELECTS NEW OFFICERS .. Beatrice Pitney, '27, will be president of the Christian Association nex year, succeeding Winifred [fodd, '26. Miss Pitney has been Class Tennis Cap- tain for the past three years and a member of the Editorial Board of the News, and head ol-the Religious Meetings Committee of the Christian Association Miss Platt was on the Christian Association Board this year and had been Glass Song Mistress and’ ae. > re} as Vice-President, to succeed Harriet Basketball Captain for two years. Wines Aiiiaiin out last Saturday Deep in the mid-brain Will the ‘college ever show enough concentrated interest (in the News or in anything else) to warrant a Specias Edition ? Note: which we reprint herewith: wa the finds itself - confronted by oe turn of the year, the News the problem whiol” sooner or later: faces every college newspaper : ‘shall it. continue ? The lifference of the college toward the News, and that occasional editorial, review or play writeup, the college regards it as dull and unprofitable. Further- more, it failg to "see. what can be done to remedy the situation. The advertisements, which pay for the printing, necessitate a six-page paper; the. average col'ege week, with its quota of games, elections and lec- falls far short of filling six pages. as a result, to give Board recognizes the ‘general in- sees except for an tures, The board is forced, practically verbatim reports of -all*lectures. without regard to their importance, and to vad out other empty sheets with unrelated material borrowed from various periodi- cals. The result is a patently uninferest- ing and second-hand production, ground out in the sweat of the editors’ brows. Perhaps because of this dullness, which is only symptomatic of the growing in- difference of undergraduates to things con- nected with college, that self-perpetuating body which is the Board, is meeting with great difficulty in finding people who are the same time. willing and able to go on with its work. Most of the undergrad- ates who are capable ‘of doing really good newspaper ‘writing—that is, those who are able to write interesting reviews and edi- torials showing some thought, besides stereo- typed write-ups—have refused to concern themselves with the News. * The old Board is no longer under the ob'igation to stimulate college interest— its ' work has been done. “The remainder of the Board is unwilling to go on with a task involving increasing—work for a The reader is advised to reread the editorial in the News of March 30, * . steadily diminishing number of people, un- less the college feels that thére is really a definite need for the News. In the. present state of indifference, there seem to be only two possible’ either the entire Board must resign, and the News stop until a new group of people, impelled by a new impetus, and backed by a new college sense of need, create a new paper, or, if it is to continue now, it must be made far less for- mal, to include no advertising at all, several editorials, an occasional review or really in- teresting write-ups, and calendar for the next weck—in this way, it could contain all the features which the college now finds COUrses : interesting, and the thankless drudgery of a small and harried. group would be clinjinated. This scaling down would probably mean that the alumnae, who are by far the largest-subscribers tothe News, would cease to be interested. But after all, a college newspaper must try to adapt itself primarily undergraduates. and not to the 2 oes _ Ifthe alumnae‘are interested in the lectures and sports of college, they can demand full accounts-in the Alumnae Bule- tin; but undergraduates are not interested ‘n the majority of write-ups of events which they either attended themselves or did not think worth attending. The question is one for the college to consider, since it is ultimately as a result of college interest and backing that a col- lege. newspaper achieves any degree of success. It is certainly significant that dur- ing this entire year, the News has received not more than two letters from undergrad- uates who had something to put before the to the college. It exists now as a means of ex- pression forthe college. Does the college want it? : * oe : The Board would welcome all sugges: tions and criticisms of these proposals. € z > BRYN MAWR TO SHARE IN .ESTATE OF NEW YORK WOMAN The Hartford - Hospital of Hartford, Conn., was bequeathed $25,000 in the will of Mrs. Alice D. Jackson, filed, recently The will disposed of an estate of over $251000 in real and about $150,000 in per- sonal property. Mrs. Jackson died last bMarch 26. The Manhattan Eye, = and Throat Hospital was given $25,000. Two-thirds of the balance of the residuary estate was given to Bryn Mawr College, and the |remaining third went to Tuskegee In- stitute, Tuskegee, Ala. The will directed that the Hartford Hospital should: employ either the inter- | est’ or the principal of the $25,000 in re-| | search work, if possible, in the direction of preventive. medicine, and directed sane | University of Paris. hay M. CESTRE COMPARES FRENCH -AND AMERICAN COLLEGES We reprint the following article from The Intercollegiate World since any statement of M. Charles Cestre is of personal interest to Bryn Mawr in view of the opportunity af- forded us by his series of lectures last fall. M. Cestre is now at the University of Michi- gan, He is reported to have made this com- varison of French and American colleges : “In France a great deal of personal -work is necessary, especially in the department of literature. So much time is required for studying that there is little time for outside activities. As law is a more mechanical the time to go out for. athletics. “Dormitories and fraternities have been study, it is only the law student who has put recently introduced ‘into French universi- | ties. Due to congested conditions, dormitories | | have now been huilt bas A rsh’ i TUITION RAISE NEEDED FOR RUNNING EXPENSES Slight Increase in Many Items Makes Yearly Deficit Alarming Goodhart Hall New Demand LIBRARY TO BENEFIT $ luition for next year will be increased $100, accordirf~ to President Park's annourfcement in chapel Wednesday morning, Maggh 31. This meatis that the. directors have decided on a required sum of $400 instead of the present $300. Unfortunately, thic does not imply that any unusually great work is to be put under way. With the exception of larger hook purchases for the library most of the money is to go to meet increased running - expenses, for although no one item has risen tremendously about fifty smaller ex- penses have ittcreased slightly. In 1920, in order to complete a two million dollar endowment drive, it was necessary to clear the college debt. This was accomplished by borrowing $17,000 out of Mrs. Russell Sage’s gift to the college; hug the directors did this only on condition that the income of-this $17, 000 be devoted solely to feplacing the bor- rowed capital“~As soon as this obliga- tion is met this interest will be free to ‘meet ordinary deficits in the college ex peuses. Added to the usual yearly items will be the upkeep of Goodhart hall, which it cost about $5000 an- is estimated will CONTINUED ON PAGE 5 GATES OF PARADISE LEAD TO MISS TSUDA’S SCHOOL Often Failed Seams Are Cause of Japanese Suicides “Missionary work today is not what it used to be,” sad Mrs. J. S. Kennard, a Bryn Mawr. graduate, while speaking at Vespers Sunday, April 11, on Miss Tsuda's school in ‘Tokio. luteresting movements have arisen it), every part of Japan recegtly; but nothing of any greater importance than Miss Tsuda’s sclfdol; Since it is an indepen- dent Christian institution, not in any way managed by foreigriet, its activity lies. chiefly in the hands of local Japanese teachers. Due to the devastation of the earthquake the accommodations are un- fortunately small and quite inadequate for the increasing number of applicants. The main building is nothing short of a barracks, just barely providing sufficient class room. , But this does not dfmpen the unlimited enthusiasm of the Japaneses: girls who are. seeking education, . Those who pass the entrance examinations look upon their admissiom as if they were about to walk through the gates of paradise. This un- quenchable thirst for knowledge is typical of modern young Japan as a whole. . Unfortunately, the Japanese suffer from | ‘CONTINUED ON PAGES The Concer News announces with pleasure the election of N. C. Bow- “man, ’27, as Business’ Manager for 1926-27, to succeed J. Lee, '27, and’ P. McElwain, 28, as Se